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Question of the Day - 13 February 2026

Q:

Friday the 13th is coming up in February, the unluckiest day in the unluckiest month! Can you tell us why Friday the 13th is considered unlucky?

A:

Every Friday the 13th, we get this question. There are three in 2026. If February has one and it's not a leap year, there's one in March. Another one is queued up for November. So we'll answer this once for the year. 

Also, we weren't aware that February is the unluckiest month. We learned that the ancient Romans believed even numbers were unlucky, so February was designated as the month for rites of the dead, intentionally keeping it at 28 days. But that led to the shortest-month curse, with some cultures believing the "incomplete" month was unlucky. And February babies were sometimes thought to be more prone to melancholy (likely due to winter dreariness). And then of course there's Groundhog Day, the crux of which a series of unwelcome or tedious events appear to be recurring in exactly the same way.

Anyway, to get to Friday the 13th, people who harbor a superstition about Friday the 13th might suffer from triskaidekaphobia, a fear of the number 13. More specifically, paraskavedekatriaphobia and friggatriskaidekaphobia refer to a fear of Friday the 13th itself. 

In a fair amount of research on the subject, we were unable to come up with a definitive answer on where the idea that a Friday that falls on the 13th of the month is unlucky. We don't think it's known. But we can say that Friday the 13th has a very long mythology of being considered unlucky. 

As far as we can tell, the earliest "evidence" that 13 might be an unlucky number appeared in the Code of Hammurabi, a set of 282 rules for commercial transactions and social interactions that date back to around 1750 BCE in ancient Babylonia. For some reason, the Code skipped over the number 13, to which some observers ascribe superstitious significance. One writer on the subject went so far as to claim that the omission of 13 happened on a Friday, but we suspect that's apocryphal, considering that the seven-day week and the names of the days didn't show up for another 2,000 or so years -- during the reign of the Roman Emperor Constantine around 320 CE.

Also contemporary to the Romans, the Bible recounts that there were 13 attendees at the Last Supper: Jesus and the 12 apostles. This number has long inspired a superstition that hosting 13 at a table is a bad omen. Oh, and Judas Iscariot was the 13th guest. In addition, the Last Supper was held on Maundy Thursday; the next day, Good Friday, Jesus was crucified. That's why Friday has traditionally been regarded as a day of abstinence and penance by Christians.

Similarly, in a Norse myth, the trickster god Loki was the 13th guest at a banquet and apparently killed several of the others.  

We also found some evidence from Biblical literalists that the entire episode in the Garden of Eden took place on the sixth day of creation (Friday). Thus, some believe that Eve ate the forbidden apple on a "Friday."

One of the most prevalent and popular myths attempting to explain the origin of the Friday the 13th superstition stems from what happened on Friday the 13th in October 1307, when hundreds of Knights Templar, a Catholic military order, were arrested throughout France, charged with heresy, sacrilege, and Satanism, and ultimately burned at the stake.

Then in the late 1300s, in his Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote that it was bad luck to start a journey or a project on a Friday.

Another superstition about the number 13 comes from around the 16th century, when witches were all the rage in Europe. It was believed that a "coven," or a gathering of witches, consisted of 13 women. 

A few centuries later during the highly superstitious Victorian era in the mid-1800s, someone somewhere put the two together, Friday and 13, and came up with the idea of a doubly unlucky day.

There's another reference in the 1834 French play Les Finesses des Gribouilles, when a character says, "I was born on a Friday, December 13th, 1813, from which come all of my misfortunes." 

And that localizes paraskevidekatriaphobia as a primarily northern European and (by extension to the colonies) American and Canadian superstition. 

In Latin countries, along with Greece, Tuesday is the "bad-omen" day; they consider it dominated by Ares, the god of war.

In China and Japan, April 4 (4/4) is the unluckiest day of the year; the Chinese word for "four" sounds a lot like the word for death.

 

No part of this answer may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without the written permission of the publisher.

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Comments

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  • Kevin Lewis Feb-13-2026
    Older than all that
    If you have 13 of something and are trying to divide it up among your clan, there's always going to be one extra left over, and bloody fights will break out, whether we're talking about rabbits killed by Thog the Caveman or bagels at the office.

  • Edso Feb-13-2026
    Dang!
    My family is in trouble then.   I was born on 4/4, my brother was born on a Friday, 4/13 and my son was born in February.  Man, we are some unlucky people.  
    
    Thanks for the very interesting QOD.

  • That Don Guy Feb-13-2026
    re: Older than all that
    This is one of the reasons the College Football Playoff committee usually has 13 members; the only possible way a vote can end in an unbreakable tie is if each member votes for a different team. (If there is, say, a 5-5-3 tie, they take another vote between the two teams with 5. Eventually, all ties other than 13-way ties can be broken with enough votes.)

  • David Miller Feb-13-2026
    Nonsense
      Some people seem to have the need to believe in unprovable things. You could probably find similar reasons to claim that any other day of the year as being unlucky.

  • David Todd Feb-13-2026
    What about the 13th floor?
    And what about no 13th floor in buildings?? Where / when did that originate?

  • O2bnVegas Feb-13-2026
    Excellent
    I can't imagine the effort to gather all that.  Whether or not one likes this type of thing, that info is fun and interesting.  Thanks so much, deke and all of LVA.
    
    Candy

  • Robert Feb-13-2026
    Been pretty lucky for me!
    I was born on a (Friday) May 13th, and the doctor that delivered me had the same birthday! And back when he was born, that particular May 13th was also on a Friday!

  • Llew Feb-14-2026
    Geez
    Hmmmm, my birthday was on Friday, February 13 (I didn’t get to this QoD until Saturday). Guess the rest of my life is doomed. 😱
    The 4/4 makes sense. That’s my ex’s  birthday.  Chose to share all of that bad luck with me.  Lucky me.  😏